Summary
In Langstroth v. Golding, 41 N. J. Eq. 49, 3 Atl. 151 (Runyon, Ch., 1886), testator directed: "Having $2,000 out at interest at seven per cent.
Summary of this case from Blair v. ScribnbrOpinion
02-26-1886
W. H. Davis, for complainant. Parmly, Olendorf & Fish, for executor. John Griffing, for the Andersons.
Bill for construction of will. On final hearing on pleadings and proofs.
W. H. Davis, for complainant.
Parmly, Olendorf & Fish, for executor.
John Griffing, for the Andersons.
RUNYON, Ch. The bill is filed for a construction of the will of Esther M. Golding, deceased, late of Jersey City, who died May 27, 1879. The will is dated April 8, 1879. By the first clause, the testatrix directed her executors to pay her debts and funeral and testamentary expenses. By the second, she gave to the complainant, her granddaughter, by the name of Esther Maria Johnson, her jewelry and personal ornaments.
By the third, she devised in fee to her son, John Frederick Golding, her house and lot, No. 242 East Fiftieth street, New York, where she then resided, subject to the mortgage of $6,000, and accrued interest thereon, and subject to the right of his father, her husband, John Frederick Golding, to occupy one of the rooms in the house; and she also in that clause gave to her son, John, all the furniture, carpets, etc., and other articles in the house belonging to her, and not specifically bequeathed to the complainant. By the fourth, she gave the use of the beforementioned room to her husband. The fifth clause is as follows:
"Having .$2,000 out at interest at 7 per cent., it is my will that the said sum shall be kept invested by my executor till my granddaughter Esther Maria Johnson shall arrive at the age of twenty-five years, when I direct that the said sum of $2,000 shall be equally divided between her and my husband, John Frederick Golding. It is my will that, so long as my son, husband, and granddaughter can agree, they shall occupy the house I now reside in; my husband to have the room hereinbefore referred to, and my granddaughter to have a comfortable room, comfortably furnished, and the accrued interest on said sum of $2,000, to be used and applied towards the interest on the mortgage upon the said house devised to my said son. Whenever my son, granddaughter, and husband find it disagreeable to occupy the said house together, as above stated, and my granddaughter shall desire to leave the same, then it is my will that, from and after that time, the interest accruing on her share of said $2,000 be paid to her for her own use and benefit. In the event of my husband's death before my granddaughter arrives at the age of twenty-five years, his share of said $1,000 to go to his legal representatives, or such person or persons, in such share or shares, as he may by will direct. In the event of my granddaughter Esther Maria dying before reaching the age of twenty-five years, leaving children, then the said $1,000 to go to her said children, share and share alike; and if she die without leaving children or any child, then said sum of $1,000 to be divided between my legal representatives, as though I had died intestate."
By the sixth clause she gave, devised, and bequeathed all the rest, residue, and remainder of her estate, real and personal, to her son, John F. Golding, her granddaughter, the complainant, and her (the testatrix's) husband, John F. Golding. She appointed Rev. William McAllister and her son, John F. Golding, executors and guardians of the person and estate of her granddaughter, the complainant. The will was proved June 9, 1885, by her son alone, Mr. McAllister having died. The testatrix's husband predeceased her. He died intestate. She left the following children, viz.: John Frederick Golding, Lucinda C. Andrew, and Mahala Roden; also the following children of her deceased daughters, viz.: Jeannie and William S. Anderson, children of her deceased daughter Esther; Charles A. King, son of her deceased daughter Cornelia; and Esther M. Johnson, (the complainant,) daughter of her deceased daughter Elizabeth. After the making of the will, (it was, as before stated, made April 8, 1879,) and on the first of March, 1880, the testatrix bought a house in Jersey City for $2,500, of which sum she paid $1,800 in cash, and for the balance, $700, gave a mortgage upon the property. On the twenty-third of May following, she, having paid off the $700 mortgage, caused it to be canceled of record. On the twenty-fifth of Mayfollowing, she gave a mortgage for $1,000 upon the property, which is still an incumbrance thereon. Between the time of the date of the will and her death, she paid $1,000 on account of the mortgage on the New York property, and she received the $2,000 mentioned in the fifth clause of the will. At the time of her death her entire property consisted of the house and lot in New York, which at that time was subject to a mortgage originally for $6,000, (but upon which $1,000 of principal had been paid since she made the will,) with interest payable at 5 per cent. per annum; the house and lot in Jersey City, which was subject to a mortgage for $1,000; and the personal property specifically given to the complainant, appraised at $113.97, and that specifically given to the testatrix's son, which was appraised at $576.02. Her debts and funeral expenses will, it is supposed, amount to $500. The following are the questions presented: First, whether the gift of $2,000 in the fifth clause of the will is a specific or a general legacy; second, whether the share therein given to the testatrix's husband lapsed by his death in the life-time of the testatrix, and if not, whether it goes to his next of kin; third, if the $2,000 legacy is general, from whence is it to be paid? And, further, from what are the debts and funeral expenses to be paid?
The gift of the $2,000 is a general legacy. Whether the gift of a sum of money "invested" in a particular way is specific or not depends upon the question whether the testator meant the legatee to have the sum, however invested, or whether the actual investment is the important part of the description. Theob. Wills, 31. In this case, the investment is not an important part of the description; for the testatrix contemplated that it might be changed. She provided for such change. The money is to be kept invested until the complainant shall arrive at the age of 25 years. The fact that the testator contemplated such change has frequently been held to be evidence that the investment was not material. Again, the gift was not of an entire sum invested, but only of part of a larger sum. The fund was $2,400. The reference to the fact that the money was invested was due to the consideration that it was well invested, at a high legal rate of interest, on property in New York, and she desired that it should be kept well invested until the complainant had attained the age of 25 years. In Gillaume v. Adderley, 15 Ves. 384, where the gift was of a sum of £5,000 or 50,000 current rupees, afterwards described as "now vested in the [East India] company's bonds," was held to be not a specific, but a general legacy. In Le Grice v. Finch, 3 Mer. 50, a bequest of £500, which the testatrix and her mother then had out upon mortgage, was held to be a general and not a specific legacy. In Sparrow v. Josselyn, 16 Beav. 135, a gift of £10,000 sterling, being the testator's share of the capital then engaged in a certain banking business, was held to be a general legacy. In Mytton v. Mytton, L. H. 19 Eq. 30, a legacy of the sum of "£3,000. invested in Indian security," was held to be general, and not specific. See, also, Bevan v. Attorney General, 4 Giff. 361.
The legacy of $1,000 (half of the sum of $2,000 bequeathed by the fifth clause of the will) given to the testatrix's husband on the complainant'sattaining to the age of 25 years, with provision that, in case he should die before that time, it should go to his legal representatives, lapsed as to him by his death in the testatrix's life-time, but not as to his legal representatives. Willing v. Baine, 3 P. Wms. 113; Hawk. Wills, 244. He died intestate. The $2,400 were all paid in before the testatrix's death, as before stated.
The pecuniary legacies (those given by the fifth clause) are charged upon the residue. Corwine v. Corwine, 24 N. J. Eq. 579. If that prove insufficient, the legatees will have no right of recourse to the property given in specific legacies. 1 Roper, Leg. 356.
The persons other than John F. Golding, the son, who claim the legacy of $2,000 insist that he is chargeable with their shares of that legacy because he is executor of the will, and real estate is thereby devised to him which he has accepted. The proposition cannot be maintained. The case cited (Brown v. Knapp, 17 Hun, 160) does not support it. It applies the rule that when a legacy is given, and the will directs that it be paid by a person to whom real estate is thereby devised, and such person accepts the devise, the devisee personally and the land devised are charged with the payment of the legacy. In that case the devisee was the executor. But in the case in hand there is no direction in the will that the son pay the legacy. Nor is the son chargeable with the $1,000 paid upon the mortgage of the New York property after the making of the will. That property was devised to him "subject to the mortgage of $6,000." The devise is not a devise subject to a charge in favor of the estate, but a gift of the property subject to the incumbrance thereon, and the devisee is entitled to the benefit of the reduction of the mortgage by the testatrix.
The residuary clause gives to the three persons therein named—the complainant, the testatrix's son, and the testatrix's husband—all the rest, residue, and remainder of the estate, real and personal. As before stated, the husband predeceased the testatrix. The devisees, under the terms of the clause, were tenants in common. Revision, 167, § 78. The testatrix must be held to have died intestate as to the share of her husband, which lapsed. Hand v. Marcy, 28 N. J. Eq. 59.
All the personal estate (it was appraised at $689.99) was given specifically, by the will, to the complainant and the testatrix's son, John F. Golding. The amount of the debts is estimated at about $500. John F. Golding is not, nor is the land specifically devised to him, chargeable with the debts. Though he has accepted that land under the will, and the will directs that the debts and funeral expenses be paid by the executors, the direction is merely formal. There were two executors, and property was given by the will to only one of them. Warren v. Davies, 2 Mylne & K. 49; Theob. Wills, 469. The residue is first liable for the payment of the debts and general legacies; and then the lands specifically devised and the specific legacies are together liable to pay ratably any deficiency. Long v. Short, 1 P. Wms. 403; Shreve v. Shreve, 17 N. J. Eq.,487; Thomas v. Thomas, Id. 356. The testatrix, by giving the whole of the residue of her estate, real and personal, in one mass,after giving the legacies, specific and general, evinced the intention to charge the legacies on the residuary estate, and, though the gift as to one-third of the residue has lapsed, that third is equally liable with the rest to the payment of the general legacies. But in payment of the debts, the share of the residue devised to the husband, and of which the testatrix died intestate, is first liable.